The Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) program is an IRS initiative designed to support free tax preparation service in underserved communities for low-to-moderate income families. The following will briefly introduce the eligibility and procedures of VITA program.
The VITA program offers free tax help to people who generally make $56,000 or less, persons with disabilities and limited English-speaking taxpayers who need assistance in preparing their own tax returns. While the IRS manages the VITA programs, the VITA sites are managed by IRS partners and staffed by their volunteers who want to make a difference in their communities. The IRS-certified volunteers who provide tax counselling are often retired individuals associated with non-profit organizations that receive grants from the IRS.
VITA services are not only free, they are also a reliable and trusted source for preparing tax returns. All VITA volunteers who prepare returns must take and pass tax law training that meets or exceeds IRS standards. This training includes maintaining the privacy and confidentiality of all taxpayer information. In addition to requiring volunteers to certify their knowledge of the tax laws, the IRS requires a quality review check for every return prepared at a VITA site prior to filing. Each filing season, tens of thousands of dedicated VITA volunteers prepare millions of federal and state returns. They also assist taxpayers with the preparation of thousands of Facilitated Self-Assistance returns.
Please note VITA program cannot prepare the following forms:
Schedule C with loss, depreciation or business use of home
Complicated Schedule D (capital gains and losses)
Form SS-5 (request for Social Security Number)
Form 8606 (non-deductible IRA)
Form 8814 (child taxed at parent’s tax rate)
Form SS-8 (determination of worker status for purposes of federal employment taxes and income tax withholding)
Parts 4 & 5 of Form 8962 (Premium Tax Credits)
If you are eligible for VITA program, you should bring the following documents to VITA site:
For married filing joint, both spouses must be present
Photo identification for you and your spouse (if filing joint return)
Social Security cards or Individual Taxpayer Identification Number documents for you, your spouse, and dependents
Birth dates for you, spouse, and dependents
A copy of last year’s tax return
All Forms W-2, 1098, and 1099
Form 1095-A (Marketplace Health Insurance)
Information for other income
Information for all deductions/credits
Total paid to day care provider and their tax ID number
For direct deposit of refund, proof of account
For prior year returns, copies of income transcripts from IRS if Form W-2 not available
You can use the VITA locator tool to select a VITA site. At selected tax sites, taxpayers also have an option to prepare their own basic federal and state tax return for free using Web-based tax preparation software with an IRS-certified volunteer to help guide you through the process. This option is only available at locations that list “Self-Prep” in the site listing, please check carefully before you go to the site.
Disclaimer
All information in this article is only for the purpose of information sharing, instead of professional suggestion. Kaizen will not assume any responsibility for loss or damage.
TCJA was limits excess business losses for noncorporate taxpayers. Excess business loss is disallowed as a deduction. The loss amount that is disallowed is the aggregate of all trade or business deductions/losses over gross income/gains from such trades or businesses, less a threshold of $250,000 (or $500,000 if married filing jointly; it will be annually adjusted for inflation).
Physical presence was previously the only consideration where income tax nexus is concerned. But this standard was largely replaced by an economic presence/factor presence nexus concept by many states. Just like the sales tax nexus, the income tax nexus better fits the expanding use of e-commerce. States using the economic presence/factor presence nexus standard can impose tax on qualified out-of-state companies, even if they do not have a physical presence in the state.
A corporation's disposing of all (or “substantially all") of its assets, “not in the ordinary course of business," is a fundamental change. Differently, it is not a fundamental change for the company buying the assets. Thus, the shareholders of the buying corporation do not get to vote on the transaction, and do not have rights of appraisal.
Usually, Company combinations are undertaken as a way for one company to acquire another. There are different ways to accomplish this goal. The choice will depend not only on corporate law, but on business and tax considerations. This article will discuss some different ways in which separate business entities may be combined.